Graffiti
History:-
HISTORY PART 1 (Draft)
Reproduction in whole or in part without
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GROUND WORK 1966-71
Graffiti was used primarily by political
activists to make statements and street gangs to mark territory.
Though graffiti movements such as the Cholos of Los Angeles in
the 1930s and the hobo signatures on freight trains predate the
New York School, it wasn't till the late 1960s that writing's
current identity started to form.
The history of the underground art movement
known by many names, most commonly termed graffiti begins in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania during the mid to late '60s and is rooted in bombing.
The writers who are credited with the first conscious bombing
effort are CORNBREAD and COOL EARL. They wrote their names all
over the city gaining attention from the community and local press.
It is unclear whether this concept made its way to New York City
via deliberate efforts or if was a spontaneous occurrence.
PIONEERING 1971-74
Shortly after CORNBREAD, the Washington
Heights section of Manhattan was giving birth to writers. In 1971
The New York Times published an article on one of these writers.
TAKI 183 was the alias of a kid from Washington Heights. TAKI
was the nickname for his given name Demetrius and 183 was the
number of the street where he lived. He was employed as a foot
messenger, so he was on the subway frequently and took advantage
of it, doing motion tags. The appearance of this unusual name
and numeral sparked public curiosity prompting the Times article.
He was by no means the first writer or even the first king. He
was however the first to be recognized outside the newly formed
subculture. Most widely credited, as being one of the first writers
of significance is JULIO 204. FRANK 207 and JOE 136 were also
early writers.
On the streets of Brooklyn a movement was
growing as well. Scores of writers were active. FRIENDLY FREDDIE
was an early Brooklyn writer to gain fame. The subway system proved
to be a line of communication and a unifying element for all these
separate movements. People in all the five boroughs became aware
of each other's efforts. This established the foundation of inter-borough
competition.
Writing started moving from the streets
to the subways and quickly became competitive. At this point writing
consisted of mostly tags and the goal was to have as many as possible.
Writers would ride the trains hitting as many subway cars as possible.
It wasn't long before writers discovered that in a train yard
or lay up they could hit many more subway cars in much less time
and with less chance of getting caught. The concept and method
of bombing had been established.
Tag Style
After a while there were so many people
writing so much that writers needed a new way to gain fame. The
first way was to make your tag unique. Many script and calligraphic
styles were developed. Writers enhanced their tags with flourishes,
stars and other designs. Some designs were strictly for visual
appeal while others had meaning. For instance, crowns were used
by writers who proclaimed themselves king. Probably the most famous
tag in the culture's history was STAY HIGH 149. He used a smoking
joint as the cross bar for his "H" and a stick figure
from the television series The Saint.
Tag Scale
The next development was scale. Writers
started to render their tags in larger scale. The standard nozzle
width of a spray paint can is narrow so these larger tags while
drawing more attention than a standard tag, did not have much
visual weight. Writers began to increase the thickness of the
letters and would also outline them with an additional color.
Writers discovered that caps from other aerosol products could
provide a larger width of spray. This led to the development of
the masterpiece. It is difficult to say who did the first masterpiece,
but it is commonly credited to SUPER KOOL 223 of the Bronx and
WAP of Brooklyn. The thicker letters provided the opportunity
to further enhance the name. Writers decorated the interior of
the letters with what are termed "designs." First with
simple polka dots, later with crosshatches, stars, checkerboards.
Designs were limited only by an artist's imagination.
Writers eventually started to render these
masterpieces spanning the entire height of the subway car (A first
also credited to SUPER KOOL 223.). These masterpieces were termed
top-to bottoms. The additions of color design and scale were dramatic
advancements, but these works still strongly resembled the tags
on which they were based. Some of the more accomplished writers
of this time were HONDO 1, JAPAN 1, MOSES 147, SNAKE 131, LEE
163d, STAR 3, PHASE 2, PRO-SOUL, TRACY 168, LIL HAWK, BARBARA
62, EVA 62, CAY 161, JUNIOR 161 and STAY HIGH 149.
The competitive atmosphere led to the development
of actual styles, which would depart from the tag styled pieces.
Broadway style was introduced by Philadelphia's TOPCAT 126. These
letters would evolve in to block letters, leaning letters, and
blockbusters. PHASE 2 later developed Softie letters, more commonly
referred to as Bubble letters. Bubble letters and Broadway style
were the earliest forms of actual pieces and therefore the foundation
of many styles. Soon arrows, curls, connections and twists adorned
letters. These additions became increasing complex and would become
the basis for Mechanical or Wild style lettering.
The combination of PHASE's work and competition
from other style masters like RIFF 170 and PEL furthered the development.
RIFF is noted as being an early catalyst in what is termed style
wars. RIFF would take ideas from other writers and improve upon
them and take them to another level. Writers like FLINT 707 and
PISTOL made major contributions in development of three dimensional
lettering adding depth to the masterpiece, which became standards
for generations to come.
This early period of creativity did not
go unrecognized. Hugo Martinez, a sociology major at City College
in New York took notice of the legitimate artistic potential of
this generation. Martinez went on to found United Graffiti Artists.
UGA selected top subway artists from all around the city and presented
their work in the formal context of an art gallery. UGA provided
opportunities once inaccessible to these artists. The Razor Gallery
was a successful effort of Mr. Martinez and the artists he represented.
PHASE 2, MICO, COCO 144, PISTOL, FLINT 707, BAMA, SNAKE, and STITCH
have been represented by Martinez.
A 1973 article in New York magazine by Richard Goldstein entitled
"The Graffiti Hit Parade" was also early public recognition
of the artistic potential of subway artists.
Around 1974 writers like TRACY 168, CLIFF
159, BLADE ONE created works with scenery, illustrations and cartoon
characters surrounding the masterpieces. This formed the basis
for the mural whole car. Earlier ground breaking whole cars were
produced by writers like AJ 161 and SILVER TIPS.
THE PEAK 75-77
For the most part innovation in writing
hit a plateau after 1974. All the standards had been set and a
new school was about to reap the benefits of the artistic foundations
established by prior generations and a city in the midst of a
fiscal crisis. New York City was broke and therefore the transit
system was poorly maintained. This led to the heaviest bombing
in history.
At this time bombing and style began to
further distinguish themselves. Whole cars became a standard practice
rather than an event, and the definitive form of bombing became
the throw up. The throw up is a piecing style derived from the
bubble letter. The throw up is hastily rendered piece consisting
of a simple outline and is barely filled in. Mostly two letter
throw up names began appearing all over the system particularly
on the INDs and BMTs. Crews like POG, 3yb, BYB TC, TOP, made major
contributions. Throw up kings included TEE, IZ, DY 167, PI, IN,
LE, TO, OI, FI aka VINNY, TI 149, CY, PEO. Writers became very
competitive. Races broke out to see who could do the most throw
ups. Throw ups peaked from '75 through '77, as did whole cars.
Writers like BUTCH, CASE, KINDO, BLADE, COMET, ALE 1, DOO2, JOHN
150, LEE, MONO, SLAVE, SLUG, DOC 109 CAINE ONE plastered the IRTs
with magnificent whole cars, following in the foot steps of giants
like TRACY and CLIFF.
STYLE REVIVAL 1978-1981
A new wave of creativity bloomed in late
1977 with crews like TDS, TMT, UA, MAFIA, TS5, CIA, RTW, ROC Stars,
TMB, TFP, TC5 and TF5. Style wars were once again peaking. It
was also the last wave of bombing before the Transit Authority
made the elimination of writing a priority. On Broadway, CHAIN
3, KOOL 131, PADRE, NOC 167 and PART 1 were expanding upon styles
established by writers like PHASE 2, RIFF 170 and PEL. CHAIN later
went to the 2 and 5 lines with the TMT crew. In style war tradition,
CIA countered TMT's works. DONDI came out with POSE against CHAIN's
DOSE.
CASE 2, KEL 139, MARE, COMET, REPEL, COS
207, DURO, MIN, SHY 147, KADE 198, FED 2, REVOLT, RASTA, ZEPHYR,
BOOTS 119, KIT 17, CRASH and DAZE were also active writers of
the time. LEE, CAZ 2, IZ, SLAVE, REE, DONDI, BLADE and COMET became
very competitive in the whole car arena. SEEN, MAD, PJ and DUST
dominated the 6 line with elaborate whole cars. MITCH 77, BAN
2, BOO 2, PBODY, MAX 183, and KID 56 ruled the 4 line. FUZZ ONE
was a major presence on all 7 IRT lines. CIA, TB and TKA ensured
that the BMTs were not deprived of style.
In 1980 The real buff started up again
pieces ran for shorter periods. Train yard fence repair was becoming
more consistent. Writers slowly started to quit and consider other
creative options. Many writers became distracted with thoughts
about careers beyond painting subway cars. The established art
world was once again becoming receptive to writing. There hadn't
been much positive attention since the Razor Gallery in the early
'70s. In 1979 LEE QUINONES and FAB 5 FREDDIE had an opening in
Rome with the art dealer Claudio Bruni. Then in 1980 numerous
writers flocked to places like ESSES studio, Stephan Eins' Fashion
Moda and Patti Astor's Fun Gallery to expand their horizons. These
and subsequent galleries would prove to be an important factors
in expanding writing overseas. European art dealers became aware
of the movement and were very receptive to the new art form. Shows
featuring paintings by DONDI, LEE, ZEPHYR, LADY PINK, DAZE, FUTURA
2000 and others exposed the world to the once secret world of
New York's youth.
SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST 1982-1985
During the early to mid 1980s the writing
culture deteriorated dramatically due to several factors. Some
related directly to the graffiti culture itself and others to
the greater society in general. The crack cocaine epidemic was
taking its toll on the inner city. Due to the drug trade powerful
firearms were readily available. The climate on the street became
increasingly tense. Laws restricting the sale of paint to minors
and requiring merchants to place spray paint in locked cages made
shoplifting more difficult. Legislation was in the works to make
penalties for graffiti more severe.
The major change was the increase in the
Metropolitan Transit Authority's anti-graffiti budget. Yards and
lay-ups were more closely guarded. Many favored painting areas
became almost inaccessible. New more sophisticated fences were
erected and were quickly repaired when damaged. Graffiti removal
was stronger and more consistent than ever, making the life span
of many paintings months if not days. This frustrated many writers
causing them to quit.
Many others were not so easily discouraged,
yet they were still affected. They perceived the new circumstances
as a challenge; it reinforced their determination not to be defeated
by the MTA. Due to the lack or resources they became extremely
territorial and aggressive, claiming ownership to yards and lay-ups.
Claiming territory was nothing new in writing, but the difference
at this time was that threats were enforced. If a writer went
to lay-up unarmed he could almost be guaranteed to be beaten and
robbed of his painting supplies.
At this point, physical strength and unity
as in street gangs became a major part of the writing experience.
The One Tunnel and the Ghost yard were the back drops many for
legendary conflicts. In addition to the pressure from the MTA,
cross out wars among writers broke out. The most famous war being
CAP MPC vs. the world. High profile writers during these years
were: SKEME, DEZ, TRAP, DELTA, SHARP, SEEN TC5, SHY 147, BOE,
WEST, KAZE, SPADE 127, SAK, VULCAN, SHAME, BIO, MIN, DURO, KEL,
T KID, MACK, NICER, BRIM, BG 183, KENN, CEM, FLIGHT, AIRBORN,
RIZE, JON 156, KYLE 156 and the X Men.
THE DIE HARDS 1985-1989
On certain subway lines graffiti removal
significantly decreased because the cars servicing those lines
were headed for the scrap yards. This provided a last shot for
writers.
The last big surge on the 2 and 5 lines
came from writers like WANE, WEN, DERO, WIPS, TKID, SENTO, CAVS,
CLARK and M KAY who hit the white 5s with burners. Marker tags
that soaked through the paint often blemished these burners. A
trend had developed that was a definite step back for writing.
Due to a lack of paint and courage to stay in a lay up for prolonged
periods of time, many writers were tagging with markers on the
outside of subway cars. These tags were generally poor artistic
efforts. The days when writers took pride in their hand style
(signature) were long gone. If it wasn't for the aforementioned
writers and a few others, the art form in New York City could
have officially been deemed dead.
By mid '86 the MTA was gaining the upper
hand. Many writers quit and the violence subsided. Most lines
were completely free of writing. The Ds, Bs, LLs, Js, Ms were
among the last of the lines with running pieces. MAGOO, DOC TC5,
DONDI, TRAK, DOME and DC were all highly visible writers.
Security was high and the Transit Police's new vandal squad was
in full force. What was left was a handful of diehards. GHOST,
SENTO, CAVS, KET, JA, VEN, REAS, SANE, SMITH were prominent figures
and would keep transit writing alive.
THE CLEAN TRAIN MOVEMENT 1989- present
On May 12, 1989 the MTA declared a victory
over graffiti. The MTA set in effect a policy of removing all
marked subway cars from service. The objective being no graffiti
will run. This was the birth of what is known as the Clean Train
movement. There are many writers who believe subway painting is
the defining act in being a writer. Walls, freights, scraps, and
canvas are for fake writers. These writers refuse to give up the
battle against the MTA. Even though works do not run or only run
for one trip many people still write.
Short list of clean train writers: COPE2, SENTO TFP, POEM, YES2
FREIGHTS-The
National Movement*
Hip Hop exploded in popularity the early '80s. Music videos featuring
various aspects of NYC street culture proved very appealing. Overnight
every American teenager wanted to be a New York City B Boy. MCs,
breakers and writers were springing up all over the place. Outside
of New York City there aren't many major urban transportation
systems, but writers wanted to paint steel and have their name
move. With accessibility and minimal security freight trains became
a natural target. Currently writers from all over the United States
and Canada bomb freight trains. The geographic roots of the freight
movement are difficult to pin point but are widely thought of
as a West Coast phenomenon. Active NYC based freight writers are
CAVS, SEIN 5, SENTO, CAVS, CASE2, ZEPHYR and MONE
*Term coined by ZEPHYR
THE GLOBAL MOVEMENT
During the early '80s American writers
were touring European art galleries and Hip Hop was gaining international
popularity. European youth fell in love with New York City street
culture. Henry Chalfant and Martha Cooper's book Subway Art and
the films Style Wars by Tony Silver and Henry Chalfant and Wild
Style by Charlie Ahearn became the foundation for European ambition.
The NYC culture was being mimicked and expanded upon. Henry Chalfant
and James Prigoff's book Spray Can Art documented early movements
across the globe. The book proved to be an additional catalyst
for the expansion of aerosol art world-wide.
By the late '80s the European movement
was long established and was in full force. The second generation
Europeans were forging friendships with their American idols.
The Europeans thirsted to paint in the birthplace of the art.
The Americans hosted "Pilgrimages to Mecca". Many European
writers bomb New York so effectively, that people believe they
are from New York.
Many New York writers also went to Europe. Some European were
so willing to cater to American writers that they would provide
airfare, accommodations, and paint. The bragging rights for painting
with an American were priceless. For some Americans going to hit
trains in Italy or Germany has become just like a trip form Brooklyn
to the Bronx.
SCRAPS
In the late 1980s the MTA began a massive
retirement of its flat cars from all three divisions. These cars
were sent to scrap yards in Brooklyn. Despite the fact that these
trains were headed for destruction, they attracted many writers.
Some hit the scraps because of their passion for steel; others
painted just to get a photograph of their name on a subway car,
or to relive memories. Painting these cars posed no threat to
the MTA, but the Transit Police's Vandal Squad eventually haunted
them anyhow in hopes of catching someone on their most wanted
list. The Vandal Squad knew that some of the same writers hitting
the scraps also painted clean trains. Never the less writers are
still attracted to the scraps.
HIGHWAYS
With increased pressure from the MTA bombing
trains became more difficult. Writers discovered alternative routes
to fame. Though highways lacked the motility of trains they had
the advantage of being exposed to hundreds of automobiles every
day. From the beginning highway writing has consisted primarily
of tags and black and silver throw ups or straight letters. OE
and P13 started hitting NYC highways methodically early on. Other
highway kings were COPE 2, PJ, TRAK, MED and FAYDE.
THE NEW YORK STREET MOVEMENT
Along with the new school, many old school
writers have come out of retirement to do works on walls. Crews
like RTW, TDS, TFP and TMB are all doing extensive productions.
All five boroughs are active, but the Bronx is once again taking
the lead via the detailed murals of crews like, FX, KD and TAT.
Rooftops have also become an attractive
target. Particularly on buildings that are visible from elevated
subway lines. NATO is a frequent site in Queens as is COPE 2 in
The Bronx.
PRINT
For years all documentation of writing
was done by outside sources. Then in the 1980s PHASE 2 added another
accomplishment to his list of firsts. He published the first zine
on writing called International Graffiti Times. Since then with
an increased interest in writing in general and the advent of
desktop publishing there are dozens upon dozens of publications
and the numbers grow daily.
One of the most positive things about these
zines is that for the most part writers themselves edit them.
Many writers criticize these publications saying that they are
illegitimate vehicles to fame, stating " Real Writers bomb
trains: not magazines". With or with out critics these zines
have become a part of the culture providing another communication
venue for a community who has always struggled to communicate.
VIDEO
In the late 1980s NYC writer SAN 2 aka
Carl Weston began production on the ground breaking series VideoGraf.
It was the first organized video documentation of writing by writers.
Shortly after many similar series were produced by others around
the world.
CYBER SPACE
Established in 1994 and credited as being
the first organized web site focused on the documentation of Writing
is Art Crimes. A few short years later there are hundreds of Writing
web sites all over the world. These sites range from kids at home
who have never been near a train and enjoy the safety of the internet
to hard core European bombers to multimedia and graphic design
firms established by writers to sites utilizing web technology
as an art form.
The web is being utilized in a similar
fashion in which the subway system was. People communicating across
great boundaries. Bombing Cyberspace can not ever be expected
to replace getting your hands dirty, but it has definitely become
a facet of the writing culture.
With less of a start up cost than offset
printing and computer prices going down the Web will become the
most accessible means of communication for the economic group
that created the art form called writing.